Valued Refuse, Lobsters, Landscapes

   “Art for Allâ€� is the motto of the Artwell Gallery in Torrington, which is inviting entries in its 13th annual juried exhibition.  So to ensure that everyone’s work — selected by the juror or not — will be shown, Artwell will also host a Salon de Refuse for works not receiving the nod.

   This is a clever riff on the 1863 Salon de Refuse in Paris.  So many artists excluded from that year’s main salon protested, that the second exhibition of refused paintings had to be opened. Of course when the refused included Manet, Whistler, Cézanne and Pissarro, the Salon de Refuse — held only that once —entered art legend.

   The Torrington show will be jurored by Patricia Hickson, the contemporary art curator at Hartford’s Wadsworth Atheneum. Artists may drop their work off on Saturday, July 11, or Sunday, July 12.  Both shows will open Saturday, July 25, from 6-8 p.m.

   Closer to home, the Sharon Historical Society will present “New Landscapesâ€� from Kathy O’Flinn with a reception July 11, from 4-6 p.m.  The new works concern both the hills of the Northwest Corner and the high desert of Colorado and New Mexico.

   Farther away, two new shows sound compelling.  First is the Maya Lin four-acre earthwork, “Wavefield,â€� at Storm King, the magnificent sculpture park in Mountainville, NY.  Lin, of course, became known with her stunning Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C. The Storm King piece took two years of land-moving and planting to achieve the gently undulating landscape that somehow combines movement and rest.

     Storm King makes a perfect daytrip:  500 acres of gorgeous Hudson Valley land dotted with significant sculptures by famous and not-so-famous artists. There are walking tours (about an hour or so each) and tram tours, some on-and-off that combine riding and walking.  

   On Sunday, July 12, The Dixie Rascals will perform here from 3-4 p.m.  Unfortunately the new Woody’s Cafe is open only on weekends and holiday Mondays.  Other days you bring your own picnic or depend on vending machines.

   At Bard College in Red Hook, NY, Tom Eccles has organized the first major comprehensive exhibition of large-scale work by Rachel Harrison.  

   Eccles is both executive director of the Hessel Museum of Art and of Bard’s respected Center for Curatorial Studies.  So it is natural that he has divided Harrison’s show into two parts:  “Consider the Lobsterâ€� features Harrison’s big installations reconfigured and transformed for the Hessel.  In the second part, “And Other Essays,â€� Harrison is joined by six artists — including Norfolk’s Tom Burr — in reinstalling works from the Hessel collection.

   For example, Franz West’s “Couchâ€� is now on the museum’s roof; his “Mercuryâ€� is on the front lawn and sports two specially made wigs of Harrison’s design. (The titles, by the way, come from the famous collection of essays by the late David Foster Wallace.  It’s amusing to remember that “Consider the Lobster,â€� a serious meditation on the suffering of a boiling lobster and the practice of our eating other animals, first appeared in Gourmet magazine.)

     

    Artwell Gallery is at 19 Water St. in Torrington.  Open Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. 860-482-5122

     Sharon Historical Society, 18 Main St., Sharon. Open Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.  860- 364-5688

     Storm King Art Center, Old Pleasant Hill Road, Mountainville, NY.  Open Wednesday-Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.  845-534-3155.

     CCS Bard Hessel Museum, Red Hook, NY.  Open Wednesday-Sunday, 1-5 p.m.

845-758-7598

     

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